The new proposal is expected to be close to what the Times/Herald reported previously: About $500 million for 75,000 acres, trimmed from $1.34 billion for the company's entire 180,000-acre empire of citrus groves and sugar fields.

Plans call for eventually converting the land into reservoirs and pollution treatment marshes to help the Everglades and Lake Okeechobee for decades.

The governor has already tweaked the deal once since announcing it last June, reducing the original $1.75 billion bid for the entire company to a cheaper land-only deal. But that effort also has been undermined by budget shortfalls, rising unemployment and plummeting property values and tax revenues.

President Donald Trump and top Republicans will promise a package of sweeping tax cuts for companies and individuals, the Washington Post reports, but the GOP leaders will stop short of labeling many of the tax breaks they hope to strip away, putting off controversial decisions that threaten to sink the party's tax …

Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey last year made a definitive announcement about the company's famous 140-character count amid rumors that the firm would substantially relax the limit. "It's staying," Dorsey told the "Today" show's Matt Lauer. "It's a good constraint for us."